Department of Psychology, The University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso, TX, USA.
Department of Psychology, The University of Texas at El Paso, El Paso, TX, USA.
Neuropharmacology. 2021 Sep 15;196:108556. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropharm.2021.108556. Epub 2021 Apr 20.
Highly palatable foods and substance of abuse have intersecting neurobiological, metabolic and behavioral effects relevant for understanding vulnerability to conditions related to food (e.g., obesity, binge eating disorder) and drug (e.g., substance use disorder) misuse. Here, we review data from animal models, clinical populations and epidemiological evidence in behavioral, genetic, pathophysiologic and therapeutic domains. Results suggest that consumption of highly palatable food and drugs of abuse both impact and conversely are regulated by metabolic hormones and metabolic status. Palatable foods high in fat and/or sugar can elicit adaptation in brain reward and withdrawal circuitry akin to substances of abuse. Intake of or withdrawal from palatable food can impact behavioral sensitivity to drugs of abuse and vice versa. A robust literature suggests common substrates and roles for negative reinforcement, negative affect, negative urgency, and impulse control deficits, with both highly palatable foods and substances of abuse. Candidate genetic risk loci shared by obesity and alcohol use disorders have been identified in molecules classically associated with both metabolic and motivational functions. Finally, certain drugs may have overlapping therapeutic potential to treat obesity, diabetes, binge-related eating disorders and substance use disorders. Taken together, data are consistent with the hypotheses that compulsive food and substance use share overlapping, interacting substrates at neurobiological and metabolic levels and that motivated behavior associated with feeding or substance use might constitute vulnerability factors for one another. This article is part of the special issue on 'Vulnerabilities to Substance Abuse'.
美味的食物和滥用物质具有相互交叉的神经生物学、代谢和行为效应,这对于理解与食物(例如肥胖、暴食症)和药物(例如物质使用障碍)滥用相关的易感性很重要。在这里,我们回顾了来自动物模型、临床人群和行为、遗传、病理生理和治疗领域的流行病学证据的数据。结果表明,美味食物和滥用药物的消耗既影响代谢激素和代谢状态,反过来又受其调节。高脂肪和/或高糖的美味食物可以引发类似滥用物质的大脑奖励和戒断回路的适应性。美味食物的摄入或戒断会影响对滥用药物的行为敏感性,反之亦然。大量文献表明,美味食物和滥用物质具有共同的负强化、负性情绪、负性冲动和冲动控制缺陷的基础和作用。肥胖症和酒精使用障碍之间共享的候选遗传风险位点已在经典上与代谢和动机功能相关的分子中被识别。最后,某些药物可能具有重叠的治疗潜力,可以治疗肥胖症、糖尿病、与暴食相关的进食障碍和物质使用障碍。总的来说,这些数据与以下假设一致,即强迫性食物和物质使用在神经生物学和代谢水平上共享重叠的相互作用的基础,并且与进食或物质使用相关的动机行为可能彼此构成脆弱性因素。本文是“滥用药物易感性”特刊的一部分。